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LaurieWired
Hearted comments
Hearted Youtube comments on LaurieWired (@lauriewired) channel.
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I'm one of the engineers that designs the TLBs on modern x86 processors. This is a fantastic explainer and I will absolutely forward this to folks that ask what I work on!
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Laurie, we don't deserve this kind of quality of production
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Itβs freaking me out that this channel went from a typical βhost sitting at a computer in the corner of a screen castβ to a full on television show. In like a month! And the content is new and engaging, not just someone reading a Wikipedia page at the audience. I was already subscribed but well done. Looking forward to the next one.
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Actual shinji sort: 1. Check if array is sorted 2. If not, give up and cry
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The editing on this one π
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Wow crazy production quality and valuable content π₯
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I love how concepts from 50+ years ago are still relevant today. PS: great 60s aesthetics, appreciate the editing effort next to nerdy content.
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My 5 year old daughter thinks you are awesome as do I. You are an awesome role model for her. Keep doing what you do!
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The amount of care, passion and attention you put into your content is greatly appreciated.
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Hey, CRAPTCHA guy here. I was absolutely not expecting to make the cut, glad you liked my submission and I'm sorry for making you read the wall of text! Would love to see an extended cut like last year's and I loved the ending, cheers!
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i would like to add a simple note π Before going into Reverse malware read about operating system internals like windows internals api , handlers , threads , process , services , register and etc.. to gain a good idea about malware functionality this is one of my favourite channel and glad to be one of the luckiest subscribers. β€
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I left my wife at the restaurant to come home and watch this on a big screen. I take the history of malware really seriously.
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This is the early days of C/C++ programming all over again with CPU specific inline ASM instructions for micro-optimizations that eventually found their way directly into compilers. Me, personally, I've missed those old days of programming, and have been glad to see in recent years it coming back with things like what you presented here, and also devs taking a look at basic C functions like strlen() and optimizing them using AVX vector instructions to execute them faster!
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This gives me a lot of hope as a software developer with reversing / security research dreams.
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Glad you enjoyed the Steins;CAPTCHA, spent the entire 2 weeks from the announcement to the deadline working on it :D I had some more ideas on how to make it feel even more like a visual novel / proper game, but didn't have enough time.
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Lovely to see that people in the present day, present time, are still connecting to the Wired. Nice work.
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Laurie has a way of explaining highly technical concepts in a way that I can actually understand, with simple demos. I think if the majority of tech YouTubers tried to explain this to me it would just go over my head, which is a shame because it's fascinating. Thanks LW!
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Videos this niche have no business being this well made! Instantly subscribed and liked!
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That intro was incredible. Love these videos.
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Never thought watching sorting algorithms, the first thing in the morning, could be this entertaining. Well done to everyone, especially the Neon Evangelion person! Great video, "Asuka" XD
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I like that you use the universal answer to everything for the content of the memory.
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20:34 Definitely agree with you here. In my freetime I use Ghidra to reverse-engineer games in order to create mods. While there are a lot of times where accuracy is key to understanding what is going on, most of the time spent in Ghidra is wasted by making out what hundreds of functions that I am sifting through on the search for certain functionality even do, roughly. To get a more legible approximation in these situations would be highly desirable.
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Ready to stack this knowledge
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Lol i love the thumbnail
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You're a modern day Ada Lovelace. Some of the best low level content I've seen on this platform.
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The quality of the video editing just keeps going up! Great stuff
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Python enters the chat. "Memory what?" Python leaves the chat. π Love your videos. Keep up the awesome and inspiring work. I'm digging deep into C++. It's pretty interesting.
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I submitted "SoftLock" and wasn't really thinking about winning I was just happy to apply what I learned to a project and had a lot of fun building a simple CAPTCHA. Your video is great as always and I am glad to have participated and will likely participate again. Thank You! <3
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Thanks for featuring our research! This is an excellent video - I'll definitely recommend it to my students.
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This was AWESOME. Fellas behind Steins; CAPTCHA and Future-Gadget-Login, you both absolutely smashed it! And Laurie, loved the ending - you've completely outclassed last year's halloween roast. El Psy Congroo!
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Love your sweater!
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i'm so happy to have found this well-done tutorial after tons of searches! thanks a lot!
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When I was younger, I had an interest in reversing and stumbled across Lena's Reversing tutorials... I couldn't quite grasp it back then but I now have a renewed interest. The amount of effort and clarity you put in these videos is amazing. Thank you.
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Another god-tier level video! Thank you so much everything you do and all the effort you put into these video!
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This tutorial (part 1 and 2) was SO HELPFUL! Completely demystified syscalls for me. I was able to write some small terminal programs that took in input and printed out stuff purely in assembly, which was extremely gratifying. It's rare when you get someone to explain parts of the computing stack with such simplicity and clarity, and, in that respect, your presentation style and production quality is EXCELLENT. Thank you so much!
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I'm an old grizzled assembly language programmer. You presentation of stack operations is blissfully pleasant. I will be watching your other videos and very likely recommending your videos to my students. Thank you for being awesome.
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I absolutely love the way you break this down. Thank you!
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This is SO cool! just what i was looking for atm! Thank you so much for making this, can't wait for the next part! :D
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This channel is way too high quality to have so little attention. This is the first ASM tutorial that hasn't bogged me down. Thanks for all your effort!
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It is a joy to watch someone who is passionate about teaching and sharing. A great video again. Thank you for your passion.
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Super easy to follow along with great explanations!
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Best tech show π₯°
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Thanks for this Laurie. Already waiting for the next one.
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Nice video! It would have been nice to point out how trivial the string obfuscation is - just take every odd-indexed character. You can actually read the encoded strings yourself directly knowing that.
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Happy Halloween! Happy to have participated π
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You do a really great job of breaking things down and clearly explaining them. π
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Awesome explanation Laurie!
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Honestly, amazing video. Clear, informative and useful. Given me a point to start with Android :)
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Best frida tutorial out there. Very professional keep it up!
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Wow! What a discovery... Subbed! The quality of this content is just incredible.
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